Home   +  Weblog   +  Craig Murray  +   Invite Craig to Speak  +   Documents
Craig Murray
Writer and broadcaster


As Britain's outspoken Ambassador to the Central
Asian Republic of Uzbekistan, Craig Murray helped
expose vicious human rights abuses by the
US-funded regime of Islam Karimov. He is now
a prominent critic of Western policy in the region.


Click to find out more about Murder in Samarkand and other books that may be of interest.

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

CATEGORIES

    Dundee Uni (16)
    FAQs (3)
    Ghana (6)
    Interviews (39)
    Links (14)
    Other (99)
    Rendition (278)
    Russia (5)
    Scotland (8)
    Speeches (16)
    Straw Man (41)
    The Book (81)
    The Election (26)
    The Film (15)
    The Telegrams! (4)
    UK Policy (328)
    Usmanov (11)
    Uzbekistan (195)
    War and Iran? (37)
    War in Iraq (193)





    Syndicate (XML)

« Michael Winterbottom and an Interesting Revelation | Main | Drug Smugglers and Guantanamo Prisoners - Compare and Contrast Treatment »

July 13, 2007

An Excellent Initiative from Continental Clothing

Continental Clothing has become, to my knowledge, the first large scale mainstream clothing company to ensure that none of its cotton comes from Uzbekistan. Uzbek cotton is a state monopoly, relying on slave labour and the forced labour of hundreds of thousands of children working in appalling conditions for little, or often no, pay.
http://www.continentalclothing.com/?P=55&name=Uzbekistan
http://www.craigmurray.co.uk/archives/2005/08/iwpr_the_cost_o.html
http://www.craigmurray.co.uk/archives/2005/08/sanctions_again.html

Continental are to be congratulated on this initiative. We need to keep up the pressure on other manufacturers and retailers to follow suit.

Posted by craig on July 13, 2007 1:25 PM in the category Uzbekistan


Comments

Check it out - that's a site for sore eyes :o)

Posted by: andy cyan [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 13, 2007 8:14 PM


Hear, hear. You can lech at the models entirely guilt-free!
Seriously, it's really wonderful that people are thinking about supply chain issues for cotton now as well as for coffee etc. Wouldn't have been on the radar a few short years ago. Who says there is never progress! (Or at least one step forward before two steps back, courtesy of Primark et al)

Posted by: Strategist [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 14, 2007 1:24 AM


Right, this is something where we can all make a difference - everyone of us reading this blog.

We need to 'select' one of our largest clothing manufacturers/retailers and target them with emails to get them to both acknowledge and take on the campaign led by continental clothing.

Does anyone have a suggestion? Maybe start with Tesco the biggest of all, or is there a better plan? All it takes is a posting of a Head Office email address and a two line email briefly outlining a) continental's campaign; b) the enslaving of the Uzbekistan population; and c) the benefits to them as an organisation of taking a lead in the UK regarding this campaign.

Suggestions welcome...

Posted by: stevie [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 14, 2007 1:48 AM


Stevie,
I fear they wont wish to directly associate with this campaign, being purely profit motivated. Show me wrong.
It is very encouraging to see conscientious commerce like eg. "Innocent smoothies", fairtrade and organic labels, increasing in supermarkets and shops.

Posted by: andy cyan [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 14, 2007 3:07 AM


hi, i'm new to this site but not to the situation in Uzbekistan, my homeland...just wanted to share some thoughts...

tesco would be a good target as a large player. But do we know whether tesco uses any cotton of Uzbekistan origins?

I agree tesco might wish to associate. Unless there's pressure from the tesco consumers, or a prospective gain from simply switching cotton source, tesco's management unlikely to be bothered, so we need to come up with 'motivating' points. First thought would be that adding 'child labor free' or 'organic' to the labels would improve tesco's image but might affect prices, and considering the cost driven consumer base tesco might think the whole issue wouldn't bring much to the business.

Related to this subject, as far as I know tesco does not offer cotton recycling points at their outlets, this wouldn't require much resources so at least this could be done...

Saida

Posted by: Saida [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 27, 2007 2:51 PM


sorry i meant 'tesco might NOT wish to associate'

S

Posted by: Saida [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 27, 2007 2:52 PM


i think GAP is more likely to have better ethical standing - see their Red campaign...

Posted by: Saida [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 27, 2007 2:59 PM


Hi Sadia' Didnt see you there. I reckon the best target for encouraging fair trade priorties is the money in your own, and other peoples pockets! We can help make fair trade desireable and nonfair' embarrassing by flaunting the issue to our peers. iirc Gap is a member of the bunch of corporate monsters responsible for unfair trade. Nescafe have a premium fair trade coffee line which they promote just enough to be a useful PR tool, yes you can drink fair trade nescafe, but you would still be supporting the company which lobbies against labour regulations and unions for its main business.

-Just some thoughts.

Posted by: andy cyan [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 28, 2007 11:50 PM


Saida,

Tesco so far refuse to answer questions on the subject - as do M&S. But I gre this is where pressure needs to be applied.

Posted by: Craig [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 29, 2007 11:05 AM


Cyan, there are always selfish motives behind the fairtrade or ecofriendly/no-child-labor PRs (even Vogue has an article about that!) to think otherwise would be naive. But at least we can require disclosure of the source of cotton on their labels - this is our right just as we have right to know what's in the food products etc. I think this could be a start point. I agree we should continue spreading the word among our friends/colleagues. Also, press could be our ally - another pressure point. It could be either self-engaged because of a demonstration or if we know the right journalists interested in the topic.

Posted by: Saida [TypeKey Profile Page] at August 3, 2007 9:49 AM


Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


Coded by wibbler